4.3 Article

Influence of structural defects on the electrocatalytic activity of platinum

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOLID STATE ELECTROCHEMISTRY
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 497-509

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10008-007-0436-8

Keywords

nanostructured materials; structural defects; grain boundary; electrocatalysis; platinum; CO oxidation; methanol oxidation

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Structural defects play major role in catalysis and electrocatalysis. Nanocrystalline (or nanostructured) materials composed of nanometer-sized crystallites joined via grain boundaries have been recognized for their specific structure and properties, differentiating them from single crystals, coarsely grained materials or nanometer-sized supported single-grained particles (Gleiter, Nanostruct Mater 1:1-19, 1992). In this paper, we use Pt electrodes, prepared by electrodeposition on glassy carbon and gold supports, as model nanocrystalline materials to explore the influence of grain boundaries and other structural defects on electrocatalysis of CO and methanol oxidation. We build on the recently established correlations between the nanostructure (lattice parameter, grain size, and microstrains) of electrodeposited Pt and the deposition potential (Plyasova et al., Electrochim. Acta 51:4447-4488, 2006) and use the latter to obtain materials with variable density of grain boundary regions. The activity of electrodeposited Pt in the oxidation of methanol and adsorbed CO exceeds greatly that for Pt(111), polycrystalline Pt, or single-grained Pt particles. It is proposed that active sites in nanostructured Pt are located at the emergence of grain boundaries at the surface. For methanol electrooxidation, the electrodes with optimal nanostructure exhibit relatively high rates of the direct oxidation pathway and of the oxidation of strongly adsorbed poisoning intermediate (COads), but not-too-high methanol dehydrogenation rate constant. These electrodes exhibit an initial current increase during potentiostatic methanol oxidation explained by the COads oxidation rate constant exceeding the methanol decomposition rate constant.

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